Sunday, January 07, 2007

The Top 10 Net/Nets Four Years LaterWe recently discovered an interesting relic, (interesting in our minds anyway) that being a complete list of net/nets from early February 2003, when we initially launched this site. There were more than 500 companies on this list, some legitimate, and some destined for the scrap heap. We thought it would be a worthy exercise to see how the top ten net/nets by market cap fared in subsequent years. The results were very positive, exceeding even our expectations.

Times Were Different

Keep in mind, we’d just come off of a market meltdown, which is the major reason there were so many net/nets in 2003. Many were “busted” technology companies reeling from the NASDAQ collapse. Just as a rising tide lifts all boats—which is why there are so few net/nets these days-when the tide recedes, the boats will follow, and often the smaller and weaker ones are most affected.

The Numbers

The average annual return of each of the ten stocks over the period (2/7/03 through 12/29/06) was 33.5 percent. For perspective, the S&P 500 was up an average of 16.9%, the Russell 2000 23.9%, and the NASDAQ Composite 18.4% during the same period. Keep in mind, those comparisons are apples to oranges, as the average market cap of the companies on this list was about $250 million, squarely in microcap land.

The Companies (returns are cumulative, from 2/7/03-12/29/06

Circuit City(CC) up 299%Corvis(formerly CORV, now Broadwing(BWNG)) up 116.94%Enterasys(fromerly ETS, acquired 3/2/06) up 1.16%Silicon Storage(SSTI) up 66.42%Infocus(INFS) down 56.59%New Focus(NUFO-acquired 3/8/04) up 56.21% at acquisitionValueclick(VCLK) up 750%Audiovoxx(VOXX) up 52.32%Netratings(NTRT) up 191.35%National Presto(NPK) up 149.35%

In typical fashion, there was one huge winner, Valueclick, which was extremely beneficial to the average return. Only one of the companies, Infocus, was in negative territory. What's the lesson here? If the net/net strategy is to be succesful, it needs to be done through the construction of a net/net portfolio, spreading the risk among several names. Seemingly easier said than done these days, with slim pickings among net/nets. Or is it? Stay tuned.

*The author does not have a position in any of the stocks mentioned in this report. This is neither a recommendation to buy or sell this security. All information provided believed to be reliable and presented for information purposes only.